introduction to infosec – recitation 8
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Introduction to InfoSec – Recitation 8. Nir Krakowski ( nirkrako at post.tau.ac.il) Itamar Gilad ( itamargi at post.tau.ac.il). Today. Web 101 HTTP Cookies HTML PHP SQL Web Vulnerabilities – SQL Injection If we have time – HeartBleed. HTTP. Hyper Text Transfer Protocol - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Introduction to InfoSec – Recitation 8Nir Krakowski (nirkrako at post.tau.ac.il)Itamar Gilad (itamargi at post.tau.ac.il)
Today• Web 101
o HTTPo Cookieso HTMLo PHPo SQL
• Web Vulnerabilities –o SQL Injection
• If we have time –o HeartBleed
HTTP• Hyper Text Transfer Protocol• Simple textual protocol over TCP port 80, stateless
request-response model• Requests –
o [METHOD] [URI]\r\no Headers\r\n\r\ne.g.: “GET /\r\n\r\n”o Headers –
• Client type – User agent• Will the client support compression – Accept
Encoding• Client language• Last valid cache the client has• ….
HTTP Response• Responses –
o [Numeric code] [String]\r\no Headers\r\n\r\no Data
o Codes –• 200 OK• 302 Redirect• 404 Not found• 500 Server Error• 502 Gateway Error• ….
Misc HTTP• Extra things to know about –
oHTTP Keep aliveoHTTP AuthenticationoX-forwarded-for (and X-we-are-hiring…)
• HTTPS is SSL / TLS transporting regular HTTP
Cookies• A way for the server to store something in the
client’s browser for later use• Cookies default to being domain specific• Cookies have an expiry date• Most authentication schemes use something like
–o Client logs in via formo Server authenticates user, sends back an
encrypted and hashed cookie, valid for x dayso Client browses through the site with no need to
re-login for a few days• Cookies come in a few flavors – ‘regular’, ‘HTTP
only’ and ‘secure’
Cookies – cont.• Cookies are a valuable commodity –
o If I have your cookie – I AM YOUoCookie stealing used to be very easy
(simple Javascript), but now is pretty impossible (thank the SOP – Same Origin Policy)
HTML• Hyper Text Markup Language• XML format representation of the DOM
(Document Object Model)• The DOM is the tree-like structure of the
document• You may interact with and modify the DOM via
Javascript• The browser renders the objects within the
document and allows the user to interact with them
• HTML5 is geared towards the dynamic web, and provides many services (local storage, 3d API, Async calls)
• CSS is used for design, HTML is used for structure
Basic HTML Example<html>
<head> <title>My title</title>
</head><body>
<h1>Big letters!</h1> <br /><h6>Small letters!</h6>
</body></html>
Forms and AJAX• The two major ways to send user data as part of a web
application are HTML forms and AJAX (Async Javascript And XML)
• HTML Forms –o <form action=“/target.php” method=“post” />
• <input name=“username” type=“text” />• <input name=“password” type=“password” />• <input value=“Submit” type=“submit” />
o </form>o Will send data as POST parameters to target.php
upon clicking the submit button• AJAX –
o Read about JQuery and AsyncHttpRequest()
PHP• Server-side processing language,
commonly used in web applications• Hybrid perl & C syntax• Once the web server support
processing PHP files, all that’s needed is –<?php
echo “Hello, world!”;?>
PHP – cont.• Headers are sent using header() (all calls to
header() must be before sending data)• Data is sent via echo / print() calls (or
anything that writes to stdout)• Input is done via HTTP parameters -
$_POST[“var_name”]• The body of the request can be had via
reading from stdin directly / file_get_contents(php://input) or stream_get_contents(STDIN)
A little more<?php
mysql_connect("your.hostaddress.com", "username", "password") or die(mysql_error());
mysql_select_db("Database_Name") or die(mysql_error());
?>
PHP – Tips and Tricks• Don’t forget the “;” at the end of each line• Use the “or die();” syntax to quickly find when
your code breaks• Errors are hard to spot. Your machines should
have error reporting enabled, but don’t expect much
• May need to revert to “printf debugging”• You can run php on a file in a terminal, but
understand you won’t have the environment available (There could be better tools out there)
SQL• Structured Query Language• Very powerful interface to relational
databases• Tables have fields (columns) and rows• Actions –
o Select – query, return valid row(s)o Insert – Add new row(s)o Update – Change existing row(s)o Maintenance – Create table, Drop table,
Add column….o + Many more operations
SQL• For each action, you can select which fields
to choose by, and which fields to return• Examples -
o FROM users SELECT * WHERE username = “mitsi”
o FROM users SELECT password WHERE username = “mitsi”
o UPDATE users SET password=“123456” WHERE username=“mitsi”
o INSERT INTO users VALUES (“myuser”, “mypass”)
PHP & SQL• PHP has support for sql (MySQL in our
case)• You’ll need to connect to the DB, and then
you may query to your heart’s content• See the example within the exercise
SQL Vulenarbilities• There are quite a few, but SQL Injection is #1• Example –statement = "SELECT * FROM users WHERE
name = '" + userName + "';“• The attacker controls userName, and
assuming there is no input sanitation, the attacker can set userName to be ' or '1'='1
• Will lead to the query always returning valid data
Adaptationsstatement = "SELECT * FROM users WHERE
name = '" + userName + "';“• Blocking the rest of the query' or '1'='1' -- ‘ ' or '1'='1' ({ ' ' or '1'='1' /* ‘• Not really limited to the Web – can be
done with RFID food tags, dog tags – anywhere someone is querying a DB without proper input sanitation
Further reading & Tools
• W3Cschools.com, codecademy.com & php.net have everything you need to know
• Also, Google
• Firefox Developer tools• Fiddler really helps when you want to
research an existing site• XML verifiers / code beautifiers
Questions?
HeartBleed 101• In SSL/TLS, a “Heart-beat” packet is used to keep the
connection alive / know when the connection has dropped
• Works like ‘ping’ – will echo sent data (built-in length field)
• OpenSSL is a very common SSL/TLS implementation (~66% of HTTPS servers on the Internet)
• OpenSSL allowed a peer to send a heart-beat packet while controlling the length field
• Attacker can send a small packet with a large length value Attacker gets back a bigger answer, consisting of server memory
Implications• Reading (dynamic) server memory• Which may contain sensitive information• And key material!
• If exploited, all your security are belong to us! (can decrypt / MITM that site’s traffic)
Mitigation• Proper Solution –
o Update to a fixed version of OpenSSLo Generate new certificateso Change all passwords, re-check anything that happened
in the mean timeo Never sleep well again
• Reality –o Most of the Internet has been patched very quickly
(<24hours)o Not all certificates have been / will be replacedo Most sites have not urged users to change passwordso Most users won’t do it anyway…
Questions?
• More info at hearbleed.com